What’s ‘Wacky’ About Wanting to Eliminate the USDA?

Over at the Washington Post‘s PostPartisan blog, Jonathan Bernstein discusses the rising influence of the “Ron Paul crowd” on Republican state party platforms. Bernstein cites a derisive piece from Ed Kilgore on a draft platform being considered by the Iowa Republican Party:

Now, a new group — the Ron Paul crowd — is taking over some formal GOP structures, including in Iowa. Ed Kilgore has a great post detailing some of the wackier things they’ve put in the official Iowa Republican Party platform — for example, eliminating the Agriculture Department. In Iowa. Oh, there’s plenty more, including phasing out Social Security and Medicare; overall, it has called for a federal government half the size of what Paul Ryan has advocated.

I don’t take issue with Bernstein’s contention that a platform like the one being proposed by the Iowa GOP would be a problem for most Republican politicians because the overall program “is just spectacularly unpopular with the general public.” I quickly scrolled through the hundreds of proposed “planks” in the platform and, as a libertarian, often found myself shaking my head and rolling my eyes. So it struck me as odd that of all the ideas in the platform that one could deem to be “wacky,” Bernstein chose to focus solely on planks that would cut – admittedly, dramatically – federal spending.

Bernstein continues:

Many libertarians have fooled themselves into believing that the American people are with them on their basic program, but if that were the case, Ron Paul would have been a viable presidential candidate, not someone who finds it hard to break 15 percent in primaries. Nor would the polling on government spending be mixed, with majorities for cutting spending overall (good for libertarians!) and for increasing spending on most programs (disaster for libertarians!).

I could be wrong, but I think most libertarians are aware that the average American favors spending cuts in general but is often less enthusiastic when the cuts are specified. And while Paul isn’t going to be the next president of the United States, his campaign has been successful in getting a lot more Americans to understand that the federal government needs to be downsized. Younger people in particular have been drawn to Paul’s limited government message. Paul was never going to win over the older folks who at the end of the day are primarily concerned with making sure that their Social Security and Medicare benefits aren’t touched. But the younger crowd is becoming increasingly aware that they’re eventually going to take it on the chin in order to maintain the federal government’s intergenerational redistribution schemes. Perhaps that’s what concerns people like Bernstein.

Circling back, proposing to eliminate the U.S. Department of Agriculture could be called a lot of things: provocative, controversial, dramatic, etc. But dismissing it as “wacky” is lazy. If Bernstein thinks that it’s a bad idea, then he should just say so (of course, my colleagues and I would argue otherwise).

For more “wacky” ideas, check out Downsizing the Federal Government.

What’s ‘Wacky’ About Wanting to Eliminate the USDA? is a post from Cato @ Liberty – Cato Institute Blog

Enjoyed This Post?

We cannot succeed without your help, as we will never accept government grants or handouts. Please help us by investing in the Constitution and freedom today!

Enjoyed This Post?
1 comments
DavidEpps
DavidEpps

Let us focus on the question, "elimination of the USDA". After all that is the title to Dehaven's column yet DeHaven never answered the question but rather expended many paragraphs of pure circumlocution.

 

Referring to the USDA spending graphs and narrative at http://www.downsizinggovernment.org/agriculture

 

* WE note that USDA spending has averaged $80B for the last 30 years the variations being highly correlated with recessions during the period.

 

* We note that food programs (AKA food stamp and school lunch programs) which make up 64% of the spending in 2012 is the budget buster and is the reason for the correlation.

 

* We note that in the narrative there was no mention of downsizing food programs but downsizing all the the other programs which make the food programs possible are fair game.

 

OK, What is wacky about eliminating the USDA?

I will tell you, CATO proposes to monkey with a department which:

 

1. Is the only Federal department which has a solid track record of maintaining constant average spending over the last 30 years. All other federal departments budgets have increased each and every year for the last 30 years.

2. Is funded by a farm bill, the only truly bi-partisan activity that the congress manages to get done.

3. Exhibits no problems with food supply, production, distribution, or quality and variety to warrant downsizing.

4. Year after year the US has had a 2 to 1 trade surplus in agricultural products. 5. Promoted the exporting of corn derived ethanol, an entire industry which did not exist until a few years ago.

6. Is the oldest federal department, formed in 1862, by Abraham Lincoln, and with a service continuity of 150 years the US knows farming.

 

Anecdotally, during the depression of the 30's we saw images of the soup lines. It follows that during the depression, there was soup!!!

 

The only good thing that would come out of elimination of the the USDA would be a dramatic reduction in obesity through starvation in the US.

 

The USDA is not broken so do not fix it. Fix the EPA who would regulate farm dust if they had the budget but now is regulating energy production, forcing food costs higher for consumers and making agricultural products less competitive on the world market.

 

On this one issue DeHaven is an idiot/libtard and CATO would be wise to focus on reducing food stamp outlays and the other federal departments where the excesses, out of control budgets, and problems truly lie.

 

The USDA has done an excellent job of promoting the general welfare by promoting agricultural products world wide. There is no promotion or concern for the general welfare in the other federal departments .